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Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars (9)

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Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (e)

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 793767

Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (e)
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Vessels.jp



90,000 yen 

A tsubo (jar) is one of the most ancient forms of pottery, used since the beginning of civilization. The inhabitants of Japan during the Jomon period (10,000 – 300 B.C.) were already making some of the most fascinating and intriguing pots and in modern Japan, it still seems to be the case. I am presenting a series of five imposing tsubo with great presence, crafted by Watanabe Aiko. Those jars are made in the Iga style of pottery and present the wonderful characteristics of that four hundred ...click for details


Iga Yabure-tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (d)

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 793765

Iga Yabure-tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (d)
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Vessels.jp



100,000 yen 

A tsubo (jar) is one of the most ancient forms of pottery, used since the beginning of civilization. The inhabitants of Japan during the Jomon period (10,000 – 300 B.C.) were already making some of the most fascinating and intriguing pots and in modern Japan, it still seems to be the case. I am presenting a series of five imposing tsubo with great presence, crafted by Watanabe Aiko. Those jars are made in the Iga style of pottery and present the wonderful characteristics of that four hundred ...click for details


Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (c)

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 793763

Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (c)
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Vessels.jp



190,000 yen 

A tsubo (jar) is one of the most ancient forms of pottery, used since the beginning of civilization. The inhabitants of Japan during the Jomon period (10,000 – 300 B.C.) were already making some of the most fascinating and intriguing pots and in modern Japan, it still seems to be the case. I am presenting a series of five imposing tsubo with great presence, crafted by Watanabe Aiko. Those jars are made in the Iga style of pottery and present the wonderful characteristics of that four hundred ...click for details


Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (b)

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 793760

Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (b)
 click for details

Vessels.jp



190,000 yen 

A tsubo (jar) is one of the most ancient forms of pottery, used since the beginning of civilization. The inhabitants of Japan during the Jomon period (10,000 – 300 B.C.) were already making some of the most fascinating and intriguing pots and in modern Japan, it still seems to be the case. I am presenting a series of five imposing tsubo with great presence, crafted by Watanabe Aiko. Those jars are made in the Iga style of pottery and present the wonderful characteristics of that four hundred ...click for details


Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (a)

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 793759

Iga Tsubo by Watanabe Aiko (a)
 click for details

Vessels.jp



160,000 yen 

A tsubo (jar) is one of the most ancient forms of pottery, used since the beginning of civilization. The inhabitants of Japan during the Jomon period (10,000 – 300 B.C.) were already making some of the most fascinating and intriguing pots and in modern Japan, it still seems to be the case. I am presenting a series of five imposing tsubo with great presence, crafted by Watanabe Aiko. Those jars are made in the Iga style of pottery and present the wonderful characteristics of that four hundred ...click for details


Mizusashi by Unokawa Kazumasa (e)

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 758477

Mizusashi by Unokawa Kazumasa (e)
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Vessels.jp



80,000 yen 

This exceptional mizusashi is the work of a potter named Unokawa Kazumasa. A mizusashi is a fresh water jar for the Japanese tea ceremony. As the container of the principal ingredient used during that ceremony, it holds a princely status in the microcosmic space. With its rich mineral character, this particular mizusashi radiates rocklike strength as a guardian of the precious liquid and the point of commencement. Unokawa Kazumasa, born in Nara in 1952, not far from Kyoto, is a master crafts ...click for details


Shino Mizusashi by Suzuki Goro (r)

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 745592

Shino Mizusashi by Suzuki Goro (r)
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1,250,000 yen 

This majestic piece is a mizusahi, a container used during the tea ceremony as a fresh water jar. The mizusashi is an important utensil to that noble art, which is at the origin of Shino pottery, and it is only natural that Suzuki Goro would have revisited the genre. With this particular piece, the potter has chosen to play with the fluidity of the forms and the colors, as to pay homage to the precious liquid which seems to flow endlessly out of the jar, embracing its protective vessel. The m ...click for details


Mino Patchwork Tsubo by Suzuki Goro

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 629295

Mino Patchwork Tsubo by Suzuki Goro
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Vessels.jp



8,000,000 yen 

Who other than Suzuki Goro could have had the genial inspiration and the technical knowledge to create such a titanesque oeuvre? There are actually a few of those he has made over the years but each is a unique projection of the potter’s fertile spirit. The “patches” are made in the different traditional Mino pottery styles; Oribe, Yashichida, Shino, Setoguro... and put together to form this wonderful puzzle spiced up with the wabi-sabi flavor of ancient potteries that have been repaired with ...click for details


Mino Patchwork Tsubo by Suzuki Goro

Catalogue: Artisan and Design: Ceramics: Pottery: Jars: Contemporary   item# 627548

Mino Patchwork Tsubo by Suzuki Goro
 click for details

Vessels.jp



50,000,000 yen 

Who other than Suzuki Goro could have had the genial inspiration and the technical knowledge to create such a titanesque oeuvre? There are actually a few of those he has made over the years but each is a unique projection of the potter’s fertile spirit, and this one is the largest. The “patches” are made in the different traditional Mino pottery styles; Oribe, Yashichida, Shino, Setoguro... and put together to form this wonderful puzzle spiced up with the wabi-sabi flavor of ancient potteries ...click for details

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